39

In short, I have this code, and I'd like to get an specific element of the array using a condition and lambda. The code would be something like this:

Preset[] presets = presetDALC.getList();
Preset preset = Arrays.stream(presets).select(x -> x.getName().equals("MyString"));

But obviously this does not work. In C# would be something similar but in Java, how do I do this?

4 Answers 4

70

You can do it like this,

Optional<Preset> optional = Arrays.stream(presets)
                                   .filter(x -> "MyString".equals(x.getName()))
                                   .findFirst();

if(optional.isPresent()) {//Check whether optional has element you are looking for
    Preset p = optional.get();//get it from optional
}

You can read more about Optional here.

3
  • Using isPresent() and .get() is discouraged as it kills the purpose of using optional. Aug 18, 2019 at 11:26
  • 4
    Not directly. The main reason to use Optional is to force a check (to trigger a bug as early as possibly). Using get() is okay if you can prove that it holds, which he does. I agree though that in general its better to use the alternatives. But there are many situations in which you can not directly name a default or want to throw an exception, instead you may want to have the error handling in the if-else of isPresent() and then use get().
    – Zabuzard
    Aug 18, 2019 at 11:41
  • 1
    Your answer was helpful for me. I wanted the same exact thing. Thanks. Aug 4, 2022 at 14:48
34

Like this:

Optional<Preset> preset = Arrays
        .stream(presets)
        .filter(x -> x.getName().equals("MyString"))
        .findFirst();

This will return an Optional which might or might not contain a value. If you want to get rid of the Optional altogether:

Preset preset = Arrays
        .stream(presets)
        .filter(x -> x.getName().equals("MyString"))
        .findFirst()
        .orElse(null);

The filter() operation is an intermediate operation which returns a lazy stream, so there's no need to worry about the entire array being filtered even after a match is encountered.

0
12

Do you want first matching, or all matching?

String[] presets = {"A", "B", "C", "D", "CA"};

// Find all matching
List<String> resultList = Arrays.stream(presets)
                                .filter(x -> x.startsWith("C"))
                                .collect(Collectors.toList());
System.out.println(resultList);

// Find first matching
String firstResult = Arrays.stream(presets)
                           .filter(x -> x.startsWith("C"))
                           .findFirst()
                           .orElse(null);
System.out.println(firstResult);

Output

[C, CA]
C
0

One-liner since Java 8:

Preset found = Stream.of(presets)
    .filter(p -> p.getName().equals("MyString"))
    .findFirst().orElseThrow();

Avoid declaring Optional<>, that returned from findFirst as a variable or a parameter. It is designed for return types / "one-liner" styles.

2
  • Is there a one-liner that doesn't throw an exception in the case of a missing element? E.g. something you could toss into a conditional so you can then add the missing element if needed.
    – Fopedush
    Dec 31, 2020 at 23:00
  • 1
    @Fopedush, absolutely: ...findFirst().orElse(MY_EMPTY_OBJ);. See: docs.oracle.com/javase/9/docs/api/java/util/…
    – epox
    Jan 4, 2021 at 18:18

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